L.S.M. Farinacci
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5 records found
1
Differential conductance spectroscopy performed in the high bias regime - in which the applied voltage exceeds the sample work function - is a suboptimal measure of the local density of states due to the effects of the changing tunnel barrier. Additionally, the large applied voltage oftentimes makes constant-height measurement experimentally impractical, lending constant-current spectroscopy an advantageous edge; but the differential conductance in that case is even further removed from the local density of states due to the changing tip height. Here, we present a normalization scheme for extracting the local density of states from high bias scanning tunneling spectroscopy, obtained in either constant-current or constant-height mode. We extend this model to account for the effects of the in-plane momentum of the probed states to the overall current. We demonstrate the validity of the proposed scheme by applying it to laterally confined field-emission resonances, which appear as peak-shaped spectroscopic features with a well-defined in-plane momentum.
Historically, electron spin resonance (ESR) has provided excellent insight into the electronic, magnetic, and chemical structure of samples hosting spin centers. In particular, the hyperfine interaction between the electron and the nuclear spins yields valuable structural information about these centers. In recent years, the combination of ESR and scanning tunneling microscopy (ESR-STM) has allowed to acquire such information about individual spin centers of magnetic atoms bound atop a surface, while additionally providing spatial information about the binding site. Here, we conduct a full angle-dependent investigation of the hyperfine splitting for individual hydrogenated titanium atoms on MgO/Ag(001) by measurements in a vector magnetic field. We observe strong anisotropy in both the g factor and the hyperfine tensor. Combining the results of the hyperfine splitting with the symmetry properties of the binding site obtained from STM images and a basic point charge model allows us to predict the shape of the electronic ground state configuration of the titanium atom. Relying on experimental values only, this method paves the way for a new protocol for electronic structure analysis for spin centers on surfaces.
Atomically engineered artificial lattices are a useful tool for simulating complex quantum phenomena, but have so far been limited to the study of Hamiltonians where electron-electron interactions do not play a role. However, it is precisely the regime in which these interactions do matter where computational times lend simulations a critical advantage over numerical methods. Here, we propose a platform for constructing artificial matter that relies on the confinement of field-emission resonances, a class of vacuum-localized discretized electronic states. We use atom manipulation of surface vacancies in a chlorine-terminated Cu(100) surface to reveal square patches of the underlying metal, thereby creating atomically precise potential wells that host particle-in-a-box modes. By adjusting the dimensions of the confining potential, we can access states with different quantum numbers, making these patches attractive candidates as quantum dots or artificial atoms. We demonstrate that the lifetime of electrons in these engineered states can be extended and tuned through modification of the confining potential, either via atomic assembly or by changing the tip-sample distance. We also demonstrate control over a finite range of state filling, a parameter which plays a key role in the evolution of quantum many-body states. We model the transport through the localized state to disentangle and quantify the lifetime-limiting processes, illustrating the critical dependence of the electron lifetime on the properties of the underlying bulk band structure. The interplay with the bulk bands gives rise to negative differential resistance, leading to possible applications in engineering custom atomic-scale resonant tunnelling diodes, which exhibit similar current-voltage characteristics.
Full insight into the dynamics of a coupled quantum system depends on the ability to follow the effect of a local excitation in real-time. Here, we trace the free coherent evolution of a pair of coupled atomic spins by means of scanning tunneling microscopy. Rather than using microwave pulses, we use a direct-current pump-probe scheme to detect the local magnetization after a current-induced excitation performed on one of the spins. By making use of magnetic interaction with the probe tip, we are able to tune the relative precession of the spins. We show that only if their Larmor frequencies match, the two spins can entangle, causing angular momentum to be swapped back and forth. These results provide insight into the locality of electron spin scattering and set the stage for controlled migration of a quantum state through an extended spin lattice.